Shield AI and UAV Navigation-Grupo Oesía partner to expand Hivemind autonomy across European unmanned systems
shield.ai
PARIS (JUNE 17, 2026) — Shield AI, the U.S. defense technology company building the world’s best AI pilots and next-generation aircraft , today signed a strategic integration partnership with Spain’s UAV Navigation-Grupo Oesía, part of the Spanish multinational technology company Grupo Oesía and a specialist in guidance, navigation, and control (GNC) solutions for unmanned aerial vehicles. The partnership focuses on integrating Shield AI’s Hivemind autonomy software...

One of the most interesting projects my colleagues have done with LLMs
has been building a system with Bayer to allow pharmaceutical researchers to query
decades of information about studies buried in PDF reports. Sarang
Sanjay Kulkarni describes its evolution from keyword-based search
to an intelligent research assistant capable of answering complex
questions and drafting regulatory documents.
more…
One of the most interesting projects my colleagues have...
The sixth episode of Wonders of Web Weaving is out : In Episode 6, I chat with Cory , the author of coryd.dev . We talk about, among other things, the role of community in the indie web, a day in the life with his website, and music listening and community as it relates to personal websites. I hope you enjoy the episode! Wonders of Web Weaving has an RSS feed you can use to follow along from wherever you get your podcasts.
Cory
coryd.dev
The sixth episode of Wonders of Web Weaving is ou...

I’ve been working with local models since they came out, and finally, they’re surprisingly good now.
I have a 2022 M2 Mac with 64 GB RAM and 1TB storage and I’ve used
Mistral 7B
Gemma 3
OpenAI OSS-20B
Qwen 3 MOE , as well as a number of other Qwen variants like Qwen 2.5 Coder
across a lot of different system setups like
raw llama.cpp with Open WebUI
llama-cpp-python
Ollama
llamafiles and
LM Studio
Where are local models now?
Early on, models were slo...

People who think current AI use is unsustainable often rely on the claim that inference GPUs only last “three years at the most” under load 1 . The idea here is that once the AI bubble money drains away, current infrastructure will rapidly become obsolete, and there won’t be enough money floating around to buy a whole slate of brand-new GPUs. Inference costs would thus rapidly become way too expensive for current AI products to make any financial sense.
Where does this “three years ...
I'm leaving New York this December for the research triangle area of
North Carolina. I've considered leaving New York many times for the
same reason: lower cost of living to help me start a company without
needing to force myself into a VC route. And now with The Consensus I
have a project that 1) I fully believe in and 2) is going pretty well,
so it's time to extend my runway.
It has been a joy meeting so many cool people in New York over the
years attending and running meetups. (NYC Systems ...

“The Campo di SS. Giovanni e Paolo, Venice,” by Bernardo Bellotto, via the National Gallery of Art . Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure and industrial technology. This week we look at homes being built on top of libraries, Patriot missile manufacturing, an effort to construct new US coal plants, a tunnel between the US and Russia, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subs...

When I open a link, say on Hacker News, and I see a blog post or a GitHub README
obviously written by AI, I feel a few things. I feel offended, because it’s like
I’ve been tricked, like the author thinks I’m a rube who won’t notice or mind. I
feel sad at how common this experience is, how many people are happy to dump
their sewage on the commons and sign their name on it. And I feel contempt for
the author, because if you use AI to write, you are a waste of biomass. Let’s
not mince wor...
📝 2026-06-17 13:56: So you know how we have the incubator setup? Well, unbeknownst to me, my wife...
kevquirk.com
So you know how we have the incubator setup? Well, unbeknownst to me, my wife gave one of our broody hens a cluch of Guinea fowl eggs to sit on a month ago .
She just sent me this...
Thanks for reading this post via RSS. RSS is ace, and so are you. ❤️
You can reply to this post by email , or leave a comment .
So you know how we have the incubator setup? Well, unbek...

By 2030, technological, economic and demographic shifts will displace 92 million jobs and create 170 million, a net gain of 78 million worldwide, according to the World Economic Forum. This post covers automation adoption, market size, robot deployment, industry usage, and the job impact employers expect through 2030. Every figure below is dated 2024 or later.
Workplace Automation Statistics 2026 — TL;DR
88% of organizations use AI in at least one business function, up from 78% a year e...
These posts are Version 2 of this material.
Please email me with feedback.
Sex and Drugs and Guns and Code Restart
A Little Psychology
How We Got Here
More Psychology
When the Model is the Harm
Privacy, Power, and the Self
Who Gets What and Why
More Analogies
What We Owe the Future
Regulation Works
How Change Happens
Bibliography · Glossary
What Has Actually Worked
Alternatives to the dysfunctions described in this series of post exist.
Ranked-choice voting...
SSW@ECOOP’26: On Debugging, Benchmarking and (Meta-)Compilation
stefan-marr.deAt this year’s ECOOP, the Institute for System Software will be attending with the almost complete team
and we’re going to present on a variety of topics. Come and talk to us at ICOOOLPS, MPLR, the Demo Track, DEBT, ECOOP Academy, and at the poster session!
Below, a brief overview and when the talks are scheduled.
Monday, June 29, 2pm: AOT Meta-Compilation of Dynamic Languages
Towards Ahead-of-Time Meta-Compilation of Dynamic Languages With an Extensible Type Analysis
Christop...
Parsing JSON at compile time with C++26 static reflection
lemire.me
Suppose that you have a configuration file in JSON. Something like this:
{ "width" : 1920 , "height" : 1080 , "fullscreen" : true ,
"title" : "My Game" , "volume" : 0.8 }
Normally you ship this file alongside your program, open it at startup, read it, and parse it. That is a lot of work for data that never changes. What if the file is fixed at build time? Could the compiler read it, parse it, and bake the result directly into the executable as a constant?
Wit...

Through decades of consolidation, reorganization, and divestiture, AT&T left
a famously complicated corporate history. One of the greatest enterprises in
American history, arguably the greatest enterprise, AT&T has often
rivaled the federal government in the size of its budget and workforce. One of
the reasons, as we well know today, was monopolization and its close relative
vertical integration. AT&T was the telephone system, or at least aspired to
be, and for decades the meaning of "Univer...
Recently I came upon Pluggy ,
a Python library for developing plugin systems. It was originally developed
as part of the pytest project - known for its rich plugin ecosystem - and
later extracted into a standalone library. You're supposed to reach out for
Pluggy if you want to add a plugin system to your tool or library and want
to use something proven rather than rolling your own.
In this post I will share some notes on how Pluggy works, and will
then review how it aligns with the
fundame...

There is a bit of schadenfreude on Twitter right now about Anthropic being hit
by the US government’s export control directive to suspend access to Fable and
Mythos . Anthropic and
their leadership have spent a lot of time and effort describing its own
technology as dangerous and in need of strict controls and regulation. Now that
the US government appears to have taken that framing seriously and told them to
turn it off for foreign nationals I can see why people are making fun of that
situ...
Last week I saw a talk by Northwestern professor Nina Wieda on the history of the Silk Road , a network of trading routes across Asia active from the second century BCE until the mid-15th century. I knew of the Silk Road but was surprised by how much it used and fostered various technologies. It started with a technology that allowed for traveling long distances with limited access to water, better known as a camel. Travel was slow, it could take nearly two years to get from one end (modern d...
A week or so ago, I posted about my currently ongoing fitness challenge where the goal was to go down from the almost 90kg I was weighing to below the oldest measurement I had on record, which was an 85.3kg.
Side note: that’s the oldest but not the lowest, because I do have an 81kg on record, but that’s honestly not a healthy weight for me.
I know that day-to-day weight can fluctuate considerably, I know that body composition changes a lot when you’re dieting, and I know that wei...

I might have mentioned before that I've been slowly working through the Simple tutorial for building a Sea of Nodes compiler. A lot of it is still sort of going over my head but I've learned a couple of interesting things in the process of working through it that I think I can bring back to a query planning context.
One thing I learned from it is that my understanding of Hash Consing was a bit myopic. Or incomplete.
I have always thought of hash consing as a way to turn value equality in...

This post was backdated, because we were in transit at the time.
This was the last day of our Vietnam 2026 trip. While it couldn’t hold a candle to our journey last year that also took us to Hà Nội and Đà Lạt, it’s still the most fun week I’ve had in a long time. Vietnam is, in case you haven’t noticed by my posts by now, one of the most incredible places in the world. I know it’s easy for someone like me in Australia to get to, but even if you’re further away reading this...
The Artemis III crew on the announcement day. Image: NASA / Robert Markowitz On June 9, NASA announced an all-male crew for the upcoming Artemis III mission , which aims to dock the crew’s Orion spacecraft with prototype lunar landers from Blue Origin and SpaceX in low Earth orbit to test several key systems and reduce risks ahead of a crewed Moon landing attempt with Artemis IV . The Artemis III crew comprises three NASA astronauts and one from ESA: Randy Bresnik , commander ESA astro...

The Pyodide 314.0 release announcement (via Hacker News ) includes news I've been looking forward to for a long time:
You can now publish Python packages built for Pyodide (or any Python runtime compatible with the PyEmscripten platform defined in PEP 783 ) directly to PyPI and install them at runtime.
Previously, the Pyodide maintainers had to maintain, build, and host over 300 packages ourselves. This created a significant burden on our maintainers and became a major bottleneck for t...
My 3D printing honeymoon was over, but the Fedi mind helped me fix my problems
stfn.plIn the previous post about 3D
printing I wrote how amazed I was
that I could just start printing, without any calibration, and the prints would
be perfect each time.
And that was true for a while, I went through the first roll of filament without
any issues.
But mid through the second roll, the prints started to lose quality, the corners
were lifting up from the print bed, but still the print would finish and be
acceptable, especially with things like Gridfinity, that are more usage and le...